What did you think of the site? E-mail haveago@dancingwiththegatekeepers.com

Friday, 11 November 2016

WATCH OUT, BEADLE'S ABOUT

If there was ever a patron saint for this site, it would be
someone that built an extension to their house contain their personal library
of over twenty thousand books. There was a time when facts, even trivia, were
the result of hard-thought searches, and Jeremy Beadle (1948-2008), writer of
many trivia and quiz books, wanted to be the British equivalent of Robert
Ripley, he of the “Believe It or Not!” series of cartoon strips, TV shows and
museums. However, Beadle’s engaging personality made him the face of a series
of TV programmes that proved the viewers at home were as entertaining as the
people they watched.

Now you have the Laurie Holloway’s infuriatingly catchy
theme tune for “Beadle’s About” in your head, it is fitting to form a picture
of Jeremy Beadle through a series of “did you knows”:

·Through a number of jobs, from taxi driver to tour
guide, Beadle became editor of a Manchester version of the listings magazine “Time
Out,” which was ultimately short-lived. He later helped organise the Bickershaw
Festival in Wigan, in 1972, known to this day both for the bringing in acts
like the Grateful Dead, Captain Beefheart, Hawkwind and The Kinks, and also for
dissolving into a sea of mud.

·Beadle’s first presenting job was on BBC Radio
London, in 1974, for a programme about the Campaign for Real Ale, on whose
executive committee he sat – earlier this year, its job declared done, the
Campaign started considering whether to start saving pubs instead.

·Beadle secured a job writing questions for the
quiz show “Celebrity Squares” by sending samples to its host, Bob Monkhouse,
who also wrote questions for the shows he presented – the two assumptions to be
made are that the questions were of a high quality, and the decision to send
them without the answers was entirely deliberate.

·Much like Richard Osman’s role on “Pointless,”
Beadle became the presenter of ITV’s audience participation show “Game for a
Laugh” (1981-85) because the best person to put on the air was the one that
describes the show the best, drawing the audience in the most.

·“Game For A Laugh” was a mix of studio games and
hidden camera stunts, the former adapted from the US game show “Truth or
Consequences” – a town in New Mexico renamed itself after the show to attract
it for a visit, and remains under this name to this day. The stunts were
continued in “Beadle’s About” (1986-96), and joined by unintentional versions
of the same in “You’ve Been Framed,” which began in 1990.

·A short-lived, pre-YouTube showcase for videos
made by the public, “Beadle’s Hot Shots,” received a video from future film
director Edgar Wright (“Shaun of the Dead,” “Hot Fuzz,” “The World’s End”) – he
was featured on the pilot, and worked as a researcher on the first series.

·Beadle’s ITV shows ended in 1997, after
appearing on screen at least once every weekend for years. However, the books
continued, series on radio and television continued, as well as an interesting
Channel 5 quiz show, named “Win Beadle’s Money” – he only lost his appearance
fee eight times out of 52 shows.

·Jeremy Beadle raised an estimated £100 million
for charity in his lifetime, including for the charities Children with
Leukaemia, and for Reach, a charity to help children with hand or arm
deficiencies, and their parents. That Beadle was among the first people with a
disability to appear regularly on television, a stunted right hand resulting
from having suffered from Poland Syndrome as a child, and to have that not be
an issue for the entire time he was in the public eye, is as remarkable as
Paralympics GB’s successes in London and Rio de Janeiro.

·Anyone that causes a person, in this case a Janet
Elford, from Dorset, to sincerely ask an “alien” if they want a cup of tea,
deserves to be remembered.